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Donald Trump Issues One of His Greatest Takedowns of Windmills
brietbart.com ^
| 12/23/2019
| Charles Spiering
Posted on 12/23/2019 4:08:19 PM PST by rktman
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To: 43north
Always go with the opposite of what liberals want, and you will be correct.
To: roadcat
Gee, disposal may be an issue? Who would have guessed? Grrrrrrrrreta knows.😵
22
posted on
12/23/2019 4:45:43 PM PST
by
rktman
( #My2ndAmend! ----- Enlisted in the Navy in '67 to protect folks rights to strip my rights. WTH?)
To: struggle
Only half of the west is trying to kill itself. The other half has always been doing things right.
Guess whos winning?
23
posted on
12/23/2019 4:54:24 PM PST
by
reasonisfaith
(What are the implications if the Resurrection of Christ is a true event in history?)
To: 43north
Nuclear power is the way to go for cheap, dependable energy.
Nuclear power is way less cheap when you figure-in government subsidized insurance, waste disposal and decommissioning costs.
OTOH, windmills suck
24
posted on
12/23/2019 5:03:22 PM PST
by
867V309
(Lock Her Up)
To: 867V309
Nuclear power is way less cheap when you figure-in government subsidized insurance, waste disposal and decommissioning costs. Only because those costs have been massively inflated by the campaign to demonize nuclear power.
25
posted on
12/23/2019 5:22:43 PM PST
by
marktwain
(President Trump and his supporters are the Resistance. His opponents are the Reactionaries.)
To: marktwain
Only because those costs have been massively inflated by the campaign to demonize nuclear power.
...well, let's see.
how much would you charge to insure for the replacement of an entire city in case of a meltdown?
basically, no company could do it, so the government limited the liability of the power companies, essentially making taxpayers assume the cost.
not to mention that we don't know the cost of securing nuclear waste for the next 10-20,000 years because we haven't done it!
26
posted on
12/23/2019 5:32:06 PM PST
by
867V309
(Lock Her Up)
To: 43north
Just saw a Michelob beer truck parked with “organic” written all over it, with a background of verdant hills desecrated with stinking bird blenders.
I’m guessing they’re pushing that as a Good Thing.
Blech.
27
posted on
12/23/2019 5:35:49 PM PST
by
Salamander
(Living On The Ledge....)
To: rktman
The closest ones to me are over in Keyser WV.
We went there one day to look at a Harley and even though they were a half mile away up on the mountain, I could “feel” the subsonics...like a weird pulsation in my head.
Could not wait to GTFO of that town.
I feel sorrow for the people who have to live there.
28
posted on
12/23/2019 5:39:57 PM PST
by
Salamander
(Living On The Ledge....)
To: rktman
President Trump’s criticism of windmills was in a speech where he was introduced by Rush Limbaugh who flat out stated that “Climate Change is a Hoax”.
29
posted on
12/23/2019 5:40:42 PM PST
by
freedom1st
(Build the Wall)
To: McGavin999
THIS!
Exactly!
It’s maddening.
30
posted on
12/23/2019 5:41:03 PM PST
by
Salamander
(Living On The Ledge....)
To: 867V309
not to mention that we don't know the cost of securing nuclear waste for the next 10-20,000 years because we haven't done it! Nuclear waste does not have to be secured for 10-20,000 years. That is a myth.
Radioactive waste is either very hazardous with a short half-life, or a not very hazardous with a long half life.
The shorter the half-life, the more radioactivity. The longer the half-life, the less hazardous.
31
posted on
12/23/2019 5:43:47 PM PST
by
marktwain
(President Trump and his supporters are the Resistance. His opponents are the Reactionaries.)
To: tet68
32
posted on
12/23/2019 5:44:54 PM PST
by
Salamander
(Living On The Ledge....)
To: marktwain
Radioactive waste is either very hazardous with a short half-life, or a not very hazardous with a long half life.
nice try.
Pu239 plutonium a fission byroduct, has a halflife of 24,110 years.
It has been estimated that a pound (454 grams) of plutonium inhaled as plutonium oxide dust could give cancer to two million people.
33
posted on
12/23/2019 5:54:27 PM PST
by
867V309
(Lock Her Up)
To: rktman
I always wondered if my 1981 term paper at Texas Tech University contributed to the gross expansion of wind turbines over the years.
A feasibility study of wind flow of the Texas High Plains & Rolling Pains.
Forecasted output and recovery of costs of investments.
Conclusion was that such projects would have to rely on government subsidies such as those in place in 1981.
34
posted on
12/23/2019 6:21:39 PM PST
by
Deaf Smith
(When a Texan takes his chances, chances will be taken that's fore sure)
To: rktman; All
Nuclear power IS dangerous. This is a FACT. The history of nuclear power is a warning. As long as we have viable alternatives (natural gas, coal, oil, hydro, etc.) we would be crazy to take the widespread, thousands years, horrendous risks.
It is almost like the socialism argument of “they just didn’t do it right”. NO, the ‘product’ is too DANGEROUS. It has been PROVEN too dangerous. This isn’t like the ‘fake dangerous’, like global warming. This is something we actually know to be REAL, and has been done before.
Chernobyl, as horrible as it was, could have been far worse.
People make mistakes. And systems fail. Materials are not perfect. And there are no dummy proof, fail-safe, nuclear disasters that don’t have the potential to end all life as we know it in a VERY short time like Nuclear power can.
35
posted on
12/23/2019 6:23:21 PM PST
by
TianaHighrider
(God bless President Trump. Prayers for PDJT and his loyal supporters.)
To: 867V309; marktwain
Pu239 plutonium a fission byroduct, has a halflife of 24,110 years. It has been estimated that a pound (454 grams) of plutonium inhaled as plutonium oxide dust could give cancer to two million people. That means the atmospheric bomb testing gave cancer to 44 billion people (10 metric tons released). The alpha radiation released by Pu239 is stopped by a piece of paper or a few inches of air.
36
posted on
12/23/2019 6:30:36 PM PST
by
palmer
(Democracy Dies Six Ways to Sunday)
To: TianaHighrider
And there are no dummy proof, fail-safe, nuclear disasters that dont have the potential to end all life as we know it in a VERY short time like Nuclear power can. The worst case explosion and neltdown killed dozens of people.
37
posted on
12/23/2019 6:36:44 PM PST
by
palmer
(Democracy Dies Six Ways to Sunday)
To: palmer
That means the atmospheric bomb testing gave cancer to 44 billion people (10 metric tons released).
10 metric tons of Pu? link please :)
The alpha radiation released by Pu239 is stopped by a piece of paper or a few inches of air.
once the Pu is in your lungs, exactly how does this work?
38
posted on
12/23/2019 6:37:55 PM PST
by
867V309
(Lock Her Up)
To: palmer
The worst case explosion and neltdown killed dozens of people.
...well, if you mean chernobyl, the 31-or-whatever dead released by the soviets was an obvious face-saving communist lie. I don't know whether you're pretending not to know that, or you're just an idiot.
and I don't care.
39
posted on
12/23/2019 6:45:10 PM PST
by
867V309
(Lock Her Up)
To: 867V309
40
posted on
12/23/2019 6:46:22 PM PST
by
palmer
(Democracy Dies Six Ways to Sunday)
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